If Winter Comes eBook

“Well, you might do a good deal worse, you know.
There’s no one like Dickens, taking everything
together.”

She flushed. You could almost see she was going
to say something rude. “That’s a
very kind thing to say to uneducated people, Mr. Sabre.
It makes them think it isn’t education that
prevents them enjoying more advanced writers.
But I don’t suffer from that, as it so happens.
I daresay some of my reading would be pretty hard
even for you.”

Sabre felt Mabel pluck at his sleeve. He glanced
at her. Her face was very angry. Miss Bypass,
delivered of her sharp words, was deeper flushed,
her head drawn back. He smiled at her. “Why,
I’m sure it would, Miss Bypass. I tell
you what, we must have a talk about reading one day,
shall we? I think it would be rather jolly to
exchange ideas.”

An extraordinary and rather alarming change came over
Miss Bypass’s hard face. Sabre thought
she was going to cry. She said in a thick voice,
“Oh, I don’t really read anything particularly
good. It’s only—­Mr. Sabre, thank
you.” She turned abruptly away.

When they were outside, Mabel said, “How extraordinary
you are!”

“Eh? What about?”

“Making up to that girl like that! I never
heard such rudeness as the way she spoke to you.”
Sabre said, “Oh, I don’t know.”

“Don’t know! When you spoke to her
so politely and the way she answered you! And
then you reply quite pleasantly—­”

He laughed. “You didn’t expect me
to give her a hard punch in the eye, did you?”

“No, of course I didn’t expect you to
give her a hard punch in the eye. But I should
have thought you’d have had more sense of your
own dignity than to take no notice and invite her
to have a talk one day.”

He thought, “Here we are again!” He said,
“Well, but look, Mabel. I don’t think
she means it for rudeness. She is rude of course,
beastly rude; but, you know, that manner of hers always
makes me feel frightfully sorry for her.”

“Sorry!”

“Yes, haven’t you noticed many people
like her with that defiant sort of way of speaking—­people
not very well educated, or very badly off, or in rather
a dependent position, and most frightfully conscious
of it. They think every one is looking down on
them, or patronising them, and the result is they’re
on the defensive all the time. Well, that’s
awfully pathetic, you know, all your life being on
the defensive; back against the wall; can’t
get away; always making feeble little rushes at the
mob. By Jove, that’s pathetic, Mabel.”

She said, “I’m not listening, you know.”

He was startled. “Eh?”

“I say I’m not listening. I always
know that whenever I say anything about any one I
dislike, you immediately start making excuses for them,
so I simply don’t listen.”

He mastered a sudden feeling within him. “Well,
it wasn’t very interesting,” he said.

“No, it certainly wasn’t. Pathetic!”
She gave her sudden burst of laughter. “You
think such extraordinary things pathetic; I wonder
you don’t start an orphanage!”